Timeroom: Fall 2022

Displaying 551 - 560 of 1206 Results for: Level = All Graduate
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: Daniel Webster Scholar (LAW)

LDWS 942 (01) - DWS Pretrial Advocacy

Pretrial Advocacy

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law (08/22/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   12  
CRN: 12176
Pretrial Advocacy is a 2-L simulation course. Each of the two sections is a law firm. Each firm has an experienced litigator/professor in the role of "senior partner," and the 2L scholars are "junior associates." There are also two 3L scholars in each firm who serve as "senior associates". Actors play the roles of the parties and various witnesses. Working both in small groups and alone, the junior associates: interview clients and witnesses; prepare or answer a complaint; prepare and answer interrogatories; take and defend a deposition with an actual court reporter who takes it in "real time" and provides a transcript; prepare a motion or an objection to a motion for summary judgment which is then argued before a real judge in the judge's courtroom; and prepare a final pretrial statement for submission to the court. Throughout the semester, the "junior associates" also submit time sheets to their "senior partners." "Junior associates" receive constructive feedback from their "senior partners," "senior associates," and each other, as well as from court reporters, judges, attorneys, standardized clients and witnesses. They also observe and critique their taped deposition and oral argument performances. At the end of the course, each scholar prepares a reflective paper in which, using the MacCrate skills and values as a guide, the student identifies those skills and values that were addressed in the course, reflects upon the student's own perceived strengths and weaknesses, and discusses how the student plans to cultivate strengths and improve weaknesses. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Only listed majors in section: LAW JD DWS
Instructors: Courtney Brooks
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 T 8:00am - 10:00am UNHL 228
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 R 5:00pm - 7:00pm UNHL 228
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: Daniel Webster Scholar (LAW)

LDWS 942 (02) - DWS Pretrial Advocacy

Pretrial Advocacy

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law (08/22/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   12  
CRN: 12177
Pretrial Advocacy is a 2-L simulation course. Each of the two sections is a law firm. Each firm has an experienced litigator/professor in the role of "senior partner," and the 2L scholars are "junior associates." There are also two 3L scholars in each firm who serve as "senior associates". Actors play the roles of the parties and various witnesses. Working both in small groups and alone, the junior associates: interview clients and witnesses; prepare or answer a complaint; prepare and answer interrogatories; take and defend a deposition with an actual court reporter who takes it in "real time" and provides a transcript; prepare a motion or an objection to a motion for summary judgment which is then argued before a real judge in the judge's courtroom; and prepare a final pretrial statement for submission to the court. Throughout the semester, the "junior associates" also submit time sheets to their "senior partners." "Junior associates" receive constructive feedback from their "senior partners," "senior associates," and each other, as well as from court reporters, judges, attorneys, standardized clients and witnesses. They also observe and critique their taped deposition and oral argument performances. At the end of the course, each scholar prepares a reflective paper in which, using the MacCrate skills and values as a guide, the student identifies those skills and values that were addressed in the course, reflects upon the student's own perceived strengths and weaknesses, and discusses how the student plans to cultivate strengths and improve weaknesses. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Only listed majors in section: LAW JD DWS
Instructors: Pamela Phelan
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 T 8:00am - 10:00am UNHL 175
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 R 5:00pm - 7:00pm UNHL 175
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 900 (01) - The Legal Profession

The Legal Profession

Credits: 1.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law (08/22/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Law Satisfactory/Unsatisfactry
Class Size:   75  
CRN: 12189
In this course, students acquire a basic understanding of the numerous career paths available to lawyers, explore basic concepts of legal professionalism, understand the fundamentals of the business of law, practice the ?soft skills? necessary for effective lawyering, and develop an individual career development strategy for exploring their unique professional interests throughout the next three years. During classes, students meet practitioners from a variety of practice areas. The attorneys address various business and professional issues they handle on a daily basis so that students can begin to discern not only the legal and business issues in different legal practices, but also the professional standards that attorneys will expect of them in the workplace. During a portion of each class, students apply the information they learned from the attorneys to a practical aspect of their own professional development. Students also research and establish a mentoring relationship with a practitioner, attend networking events, participate in community service projects, attend additional events, meetings, and conferences and practice other ?soft skills? as requirements of the course. This class meets for two hours every other week. Students are expected to complete several specific written assignments. Grading is S/U and is based on attendance, participation and satisfactory completion of all projects and written assignments. This is a required 1L course.
Instructors: Neil Sirota
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 M 10:30am - 11:45am UNHL 282
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 F 10:45am - 12:00pm UNHL 282
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 900 (02) - The Legal Profession

The Legal Profession

Credits: 1.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law (08/22/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Law Satisfactory/Unsatisfactry
Class Size:   75  
CRN: 16790
In this course, students acquire a basic understanding of the numerous career paths available to lawyers, explore basic concepts of legal professionalism, understand the fundamentals of the business of law, practice the ?soft skills? necessary for effective lawyering, and develop an individual career development strategy for exploring their unique professional interests throughout the next three years. During classes, students meet practitioners from a variety of practice areas. The attorneys address various business and professional issues they handle on a daily basis so that students can begin to discern not only the legal and business issues in different legal practices, but also the professional standards that attorneys will expect of them in the workplace. During a portion of each class, students apply the information they learned from the attorneys to a practical aspect of their own professional development. Students also research and establish a mentoring relationship with a practitioner, attend networking events, participate in community service projects, attend additional events, meetings, and conferences and practice other ?soft skills? as requirements of the course. This class meets for two hours every other week. Students are expected to complete several specific written assignments. Grading is S/U and is based on attendance, participation and satisfactory completion of all projects and written assignments. This is a required 1L course.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Neil Sirota
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 W 10:30am - 11:45am UNHL 282
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 F 10:45am - 12:00pm UNHL 282
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 903 (01) - Administrative Process

Administrative Process

Credits: 3.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law (08/22/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   95  
CRN: 12160
Administrative law is the law of how government agencies operate. Topics covered include the mechanisms through which agencies act, the constitutional constraints on their actions, and the ways in which the executive, legislative, and judicial branches can exercise oversight and control over those actions. By the end of this course, students should be prepared to identify and analyze the stages of administrative rulemaking and adjudications; apply constitutional doctrines that constrain agencies such as due process, nondelegation, and separation of powers; and apply statutory and constitutional doctrines governing administrative actions and judicial review of those actions. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Roger Allan Ford
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 MW 2:30pm - 4:00pm UNHL 204
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 904 (01) - Current Issues in Health Law and Policy

Curr Issues Health Law& Policy

Credits: 2.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law (08/22/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   16  
CRN: 12498
This course will teach students key provisions of federal law regulating the health care delivery and finance system through an analysis of the Affordable Care Act and its historic implementation, and key health policy issues facing our country including our policy responses to public health issues such as the COVID-19 pandemic, opioid crisis and access to health insurance coverage. Students will review currently debated policy implications, legal challenges and remaining health policy issues. Students will be guided through two short writing assignments and choose a longer in depth and current topic on health law or policy. Satisfies upper level writing requirement.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Lucy Hodder
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 F 10:30am - 12:30pm UNHL 200
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 906 (01) - Statutory Interpretation

Statutory Interpretation

Credits: 2.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law (08/22/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   25  
CRN: 13431
This course, taught by the Chief Judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of NH, offers instruction in statutory interpretation, with emphasis on three areas: (1) practice, meaning advocacy in litigation and judicial opinions; (2) doctrines: textual and substantive canons of statutory construction; and (3) competing theories: textualism, intentionalism, purposivism (legal process theory), and pragmatism. Despite its theoretical aspects, this is a highly practical course.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Joseph Laplante
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 M 2:30pm - 4:30pm UNHL 274
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 909 (01) - Civil Procedure

Civil Procedure

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law (08/22/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   75  
CRN: 12167
This introductory Civil Procedure course considers the issues that litigants and lawyers face in civil lawsuits filed in American federal courts. The course explores the current state of American civil litigation, the vexing issue of access to justice, the remedies a federal court may provide,the various stages of a federal civil lawsuit(including discovery),federal appeals, adjudicatory jurisdiction, subject-matter jurisdiction, the role of state law in federal courts, and joinder of parties and claims. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Michael Dube
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 TF 8:30am - 10:30am UNHL 229
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 909 (02) - Civil Procedure

Civil Procedure

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law (08/22/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   80  
CRN: 15652
This introductory Civil Procedure course considers the issues that litigants and lawyers face in civil lawsuits filed in American federal courts. The course explores the current state of American civil litigation, the vexing issue of access to justice, the remedies a federal court may provide,the various stages of a federal civil lawsuit(including discovery),federal appeals, adjudicatory jurisdiction, subject-matter jurisdiction, the role of state law in federal courts, and joinder of parties and claims. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Jordan Budd
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/22/2022 12/16/2022 MW 2:00pm - 4:00pm UNHL 200
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 916 (1LH) - Constitutional Law

Constitutional Law

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Law Hybrid (08/17/2022 - 12/16/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   76  
CRN: 14584
This introductory Constitutional Law course familiarizes students with the Constitution?s three primary functions:(1) to create the three branches of the federal government and distribute power among them; (2) to allocate power between the federal government and the states; and (3) to limit the extent to which government may infringe individual liberties. The course explores the nature of federal judicial power, theories of constitutional interpretation, separation of powers, federalism, substantive due process, and equal protection. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Only listed majors in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Attributes: Online with some campus visits, EUNH
Instructors: John Greabe
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/17/2022 12/16/2022 Hours Arranged ONLINE